US Airlines FORCE Sick Flight Attendants Get Doctor Notes January 2026: Frontier’s “Drastic Action” Email Threatens Disciplinary Action, United Won Legal Battle July 2024 Mandating Weekend Sick Certificates (22% Sick Call Rate), JetBlue “Level 3 Alert” as 20% of Flight Attendants Call Out, Spirit’s 250% Sick Call SPIKE = 60+ Daily Cancellations Stranding Thousands—Flu Season Collides With Airline “Attendance Abuse” Crackdown Creating Labor Crisis Across US Aviation

Published on : 07 Jan 2026

US airlines force sick flight attendants get doctor notes 2026, Frontier United Spirit JetBlue 250 percent sick call spike crisis infographic

Published: January 7, 2026 at 3:00 PM ET
Breaking Status: Flu season + labor crackdown = aviation crisis
Airlines Affected: Frontier, United, JetBlue, Spirit (all major budget carriers)
Sick Call Rates: Spirit 250% above normal, JetBlue 20% of crew, United 22% weekends
New Policy: Frontier mandates doctor notes ALL sick calls (effective December 30, 2025)
Flight Impact: 60+ daily Spirit cancellations, JetBlue “Level 3 Alert,” Frontier operational chaos
Flu Season: CDC estimates 7.5 million US flu cases so far 2025-2026 winter
Legal Precedent: United won arbitration July 2024 = airlines CAN demand doctor notes for “abuse”


Breaking: Frontier’s “Drastic Action Is Now Necessary” Email Shocks Crew

December 30, 2025 Internal Memo:

Frontier Airlines sends “unusually blunt” email to all flight attendants 48 hours before New Year’s Eve announcing mandatory doctor notes for ALL sick calls effective immediately—no exceptions, no warnings, failure to provide medical documentation = unexcused absence leading to disciplinary proceedings—marking most aggressive sick leave crackdown in US aviation history as flu season collides with airline frustration over alleged “attendance abuse.”

Frontier Email Language (Exact Quotes from Internal Memo):

“Let me make it clear: this trend is unacceptable and unsustainable. While illness and legitimate emergencies do happen, the frequency and timing of sick calls have reached a point where we can confidently say this protection is no longer being used as intended. Drastic action is now necessary.”

Key Policy Details:

  • Effective date: December 30, 2025 (48 hours before New Year’s Eve = peak travel period)
  • Scope: ALL sick calls, ANY duration, ANY reason
  • Documentation required: Official doctor’s note (at employee’s expense)
  • Enforcement: “Without exception” per Frontier
  • Consequences: Failure to provide note = unexcused absence → formal disciplinary proceedings (warnings, suspension, termination possible)
  • Contract legality: Association of Flight Attendants (AFA-CWA) confirms policy IS permitted under existing labor contract (despite criticizing “tone”)

Frontier’s Justification:

“This action is necessary to safeguard operational integrity and ensure fairness to those who act responsibly every day.”


The Sick Call Crisis: Airlines vs Flu Season vs “Abuse” Allegations

CDC Data (2025-2026 Flu Season):

  • 7.5 million flu cases diagnosed United States so far this winter
  • Surge timing: December 2025-January 2026 = peak flu transmission (holiday travel + indoor gatherings)
  • Respiratory illnesses: Flu + RSV + COVID-19 variants circulating simultaneously = “triple-demic” (medical term for three respiratory outbreaks overlapping)
  • Customer-facing workers: Flight attendants especially vulnerable (enclosed aircraft cabins, constant passenger contact, poor ventilation during boarding/deplaning)

Airlines’ Perspective:

  • Legitimate illness exists: Nobody denies flu is real and spreading
  • BUT timing suspicious: Sick calls SPIKE on:
    • Weekends (Friday/Saturday/Sunday departures)
    • Holidays (Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s)
    • Peak travel periods (spring break, summer vacation)
  • Pattern suggests abuse: Some employees allegedly calling in “sick” to avoid working busy/stressful periods vs genuine illness

Flight Attendants’ Perspective:

  • We ARE sick: Flu season + constant passenger exposure = high genuine illness rates
  • Airline created problem: Understaffing + overworking crews = weakened immune systems more vulnerable to illness
  • Doctor notes cost money: $50-150 per urgent care visit (insurance may not cover, employees pay out-of-pocket)
  • Time burden: Sick employees forced to spend time/energy visiting doctor, obtaining documentation vs resting/recovering
  • Punitive approach: Treating employees as guilty until proven innocent (vs supportive workplace culture)

United Airlines: The Legal Precedent That Changed Everything

July 2024: United Drops “Weekend Sick Note” Bomb:

United Airlines announces with just 24 hours notice that all flight attendants calling in sick for trips departing Friday, Saturday, or Sunday must provide absence certificate (official medical documentation) at their own expense or face disciplinary action.

Why United Did This:

  • Weekend sick call rate: 22% of flight attendants calling in sick for weekend trips (vs 8-10% weekdays)
  • Statistical anomaly: 22% weekend rate = 2.2x higher than weekday rate = suggests non-random pattern (people avoiding weekend work vs genuine illness)
  • Operational impact: Weekend = highest passenger volume (leisure travelers) + thinnest crew reserves = sick calls cause maximum disruption

AFA-CWA Response:

Union called United’s policy “reprehensible” and launched legal challenge arguing contract ONLY permits mandatory doctor notes for:

  • Fourth of July holiday period
  • Christmas holiday period

NOT year-round weekends.

Arbitration Ruling (June 2025):

After nearly one year of legal battle, independent arbitrator rules in United’s favor:

  • Contract DOES permit airlines to demand absence certificates when “evidence of abuse or misuse of sick leave” exists
  • 22% weekend sick call rate = sufficient evidence of potential abuse
  • United’s policy legal under existing labor agreement

Result:

  • Policy remained in effect several weeks (July-August 2024)
  • United suspended requirement after sick call rates normalized to acceptable levels (claim: policy achieved deterrent effect)
  • Legal precedent established: Airlines nationwide now cite United arbitration ruling when implementing similar policies

Spirit Airlines: 250% Sick Call EXPLOSION = Operational Collapse

January 1-7, 2026 Meltdown:

Spirit Airlines (currently operating under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for SECOND time in 12 months) experiences worst operational crisis in company history driven by unprecedented sick call surge.

The Numbers:

  • Thursday January 1: 11% flights cancelled, 38% flights delayed
  • Friday January 2: 14% flights cancelled, 33% flights delayed
  • Saturday January 3: 9% flights cancelled (as of 6:30 AM, worsened throughout day)
  • Average: Nearly 50% of flights experienced cancellations or delays January 1-2
  • Sick call rate: 250% ABOVE previous years on some days per internal memo

Spirit Internal Memo (January 3, 2026):

“Our reserve levels are virtually the same as they have been since 2023, but during this holiday our sick calls have exceeded previous periods by nearly 250% on some days. The result was 55 cancels yesterday and more than 60 today, leaving thousands of Guests stranded.

Spirit COO’s Plea to Employees:

“We need to get the airline back on its feet immediately. I know you are tired, frustrated and likely worried about the future, and I get that. You are not alone. Being here for more than 12 years, I also know how much you all really care about each other, our airline and our Guests. Help prove those naysayers wrong about Spirit’s demise. Let’s all pull together to bring us back to normal ops as soon as possible!”

Why Spirit Is Especially Vulnerable:

  1. Bankruptcy stress: Operating under Chapter 11 = employee morale lowest in industry, job security fears
  2. Pilot furloughs: Initially planned 270 pilot furloughs Q1 2026, expanded to 365 pilots + 170 captain downgrades to first officer
  3. Flight attendant cuts: Thousands furloughed 2025 = remaining crew overworked, resentful
  4. Reserve depletion: Reserve flight attendants (on-call backup crews) “fully depleted” per memo = ZERO backup when sick calls happen
  5. Voluntary attrition: So many employees quitting voluntarily that airline cancelled furloughs (not enough people left to furlough)
  6. Network shrinkage: Closing 5 airports entirely (Milwaukee, Phoenix, Rochester NY, St. Louis, Bucaramanga Colombia) January 2026 + cutting 20+ routes

Operational Death Spiral:

  • Sick calls → cancellations
  • Cancellations → customer anger → employee stress
  • Employee stress → more illness (genuine + alleged)
  • More illness → more cancellations
  • Repeat

JetBlue: “Level 3 Alert” as 20% of Crew Calls Out Sick

New Year’s Eve Crisis:

JetBlue Airways activates “Level 3 Alert” (highest internal operational disruption level) after internal data reveals nearly one in five flight attendants (20%) called out sick just before New Year’s—much higher than last year and rate deemed “unsustainable” by airline management.

JetBlue Internal Communication:

“This is much higher than last year and the rate of sickness amongst crew members has become unsustainable.

What “Level 3 Alert” Means:

  • Reserve depletion: All on-call backup crew exhausted
  • Flight cancellations: Last-minute cancellations inevitable (no backup crews available)
  • Crew scheduling chaos: Schedulers working 24/7 attempting to cover gaps
  • Management intervention: Senior executives personally involved in operations (vs normal delegation to operations team)

JetBlue Response:

Unlike Frontier/United, JetBlue has NOT (yet) implemented mandatory doctor note policy, instead:

  • Communication: Emphasizing employee health importance
  • Operational adjustments: Reducing schedule to match available crew (vs forcing cancellations last-minute)
  • Monitoring: Tracking sick call patterns to determine if policy changes needed

Current Status (January 7, 2026):

  • Crewing levels improving: JetBlue reports situation stabilizing (vs early January chaos)
  • Level 3 alert remains: Policy still in effect (cautious approach)
  • No doctor note mandate: Yet (but United precedent suggests possible if pattern continues)

The Flu Season Factor: Is Illness Real or “Abuse”?

CDC Estimates (2025-2026 Winter):

  • 7.5 million flu cases United States (October 2025-January 2026)
  • Hospitalizations: Hundreds of thousands
  • Deaths: Thousands (exact figures TBD, flu season ongoing)
  • Surge timing: December-January = peak flu transmission

Australia/New Zealand Preview (June-August 2025):

  • “Particularly rough flu season” Southern Hemisphere winter 2025
  • Health experts predicted similar trend Northern Hemisphere winter = prediction accurate

Why Flight Attendants Especially Vulnerable:

  1. Enclosed aircraft cabins: Poor ventilation during boarding/deplaning (auxiliary power unit running, not full airflow)
  2. Passenger contact: 150-200 passengers per flight, multiple flights per day = thousands of exposures weekly
  3. Recirculated air: Aircraft ventilation systems recirculate cabin air (with HEPA filtration, but still shared air)
  4. Long duty periods: 10-14 hour duty days = exhaustion weakening immune system
  5. Irregular sleep: Multiple time zones, early morning/late night flights = circadian rhythm disruption (linked to immune system weakness)
  6. Stress: Airline industry chaos (bankruptcies, furloughs, passenger anger) = cortisol (stress hormone) suppresses immunity

Medical Consensus:

  • Genuine illness rates ARE higher for flight attendants vs general population (occupational hazard)
  • BUT 250% spike suspicious: Flu alone doesn’t explain 2.5x normal sick call rates
  • Likely combination: Real illness (flu, COVID, RSV) + some abuse (people taking advantage of flu season cover)

The Contract Loophole: How Airlines Can Demand Doctor Notes

AFA-CWA Contract Language (Typical):

Flight attendant contracts at most US airlines include provisions allowing airlines to mandate medical documentation during:

  1. Designated periods: Specific dates/times (Christmas, Thanksgiving, Super Bowl, etc.)
  2. Pattern recognition: When statistical evidence suggests abuse
  3. Advance notice required: Airlines must provide warning (timeframe varies: 24 hours to several days)

Frontier Contract:

  • Permits: Mandatory doctor notes during designated periods
  • Advance notice: Required (Frontier provided December 28 announcement for December 30 policy = 48 hours)
  • Scope: Frontier can designate periods “whenever it thinks it is required” (broad language favoring airline)

United Contract (Post-Arbitration):

  • Permits: Mandatory doctor notes when “evidence of abuse or misuse of sick leave” exists
  • Evidence threshold: 22% weekend sick call rate deemed sufficient
  • Advance notice: 24 hours (minimum per arbitrator ruling)

AFA-CWA’s Position:

Union criticizes tone of airline communications (calling memos “threatening,” “blunt,” “accusatory”) BUT acknowledges policies are legal under existing contracts = union hands tied unless contracts renegotiated.

AFA-CWA Guidance to Members:

“While attendance expectations exist, no one should feel pressured to fly while sick. Taking care of yourself protects you, your crew, and your passengers.”

Translation: Fly sick = endanger others (passengers, crew), but getting doctor note = financial/time burden = employees caught between competing pressures.


The Economics: Why Doctor Notes Hurt Flight Attendants

Typical Flight Attendant Pay:

  • Starting salary: $25,000-30,000 annually (reserve flight attendants, year 1)
  • Experienced: $40,000-60,000 annually (5-10 years seniority)
  • Senior: $60,000-80,000 annually (15+ years)

Doctor Visit Costs:

  • Urgent care: $50-150 per visit (without insurance)
  • ER: $500-2,000 per visit (if urgent care unavailable)
  • Insurance copay: $20-50 (if insurance covers, many flight attendant plans have high deductibles)

Time Burden:

  • Wait times: 1-3 hours at urgent care (weekends/holidays especially crowded)
  • Travel time: To/from clinic
  • Total time lost: 2-5 hours when sick employee should be resting

Financial Math:

  • Starting flight attendant: $25,000 salary / 365 days = $68 per day
  • Doctor visit: $100 average
  • Cost: 1.5 days’ pay just to obtain sick note
  • Multiple illnesses: 3-4 sick calls per year = $300-400 annual out-of-pocket = 4-6 days’ pay

Economic Deterrent:

Airlines argue doctor note requirement discourages fake sick calls (people won’t spend $100 + 3 hours to fake illness), BUT also discourages legitimate sick calls (people fly sick because they can’t afford doctor visit).


Passenger Impact: Why Your Flight Gets Cancelled (Real Reason)

Typical Passenger Assumption:

“Flight cancelled due to weather” or “mechanical issue” or “air traffic control”

Reality (January 2026):

Crew shortages = #1 cause of cancellations across US airlines, driven by:

  1. Genuine illness: Flu season + COVID + RSV = real sickness rates elevated
  2. Alleged abuse: Some sick calls suspicious (timing patterns suggest non-illness motivation)
  3. Reserve depletion: Airlines cut reserve crews (cost savings) = no backup when legitimate sickness occurs
  4. Understaffing: Voluntary attrition + furloughs = fewer total employees = less slack in system
  5. Bankruptcy stress: Spirit especially (Chapter 11 = employee morale/retention crisis)

Example Cancellation Cascade:

  • Flight 100: Scheduled crew of 4 flight attendants
  • Morning of departure: 2 flight attendants call in sick
  • Airline attempts: Find 2 reserve flight attendants to replace
  • Problem: Reserve pool depleted (all reserves already covering other flights)
  • FAA rules: Cannot operate flight with only 2 flight attendants (safety regulations require minimum crew based on aircraft size, typically 3-4 for narrowbody)
  • Result: Flight cancelled (no crew available)
  • Domino effect: Flight 100 crew was supposed to operate Flight 200 later that day → Flight 200 also cancelled → Flight 200 crew was supposed to operate Flight 300 next day → Flight 300 delayed waiting for crew → Cascade continues

Passenger Frustration:

  • Communication: Airlines blame “operational issues” (vague) vs admitting “we don’t have enough crew because of sick calls”
  • Compensation: Flight cancelled due to crew = NOT weather = airline IS liable for compensation (meals, hotels, rebooking) under DOT rules, BUT many passengers don’t know this
  • Preventability: Passengers see cancellations as “avoidable” (hire more crew!) vs airline sees “unforeseeable” (can’t predict sick calls)

The Legal Battle: Can Airlines Fire Sick Employees?

Short Answer: YES (with caveats)

Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA):

  • Federal law: Protects employees taking leave for serious health conditions (surgery, hospitalization, chronic illness)
  • Does NOT protect: Single-day sick calls for flu, cold, stomach bug (not “serious” enough)

Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA):

  • Federal law: Protects employees with disabilities (chronic conditions, cancer, etc.)
  • Does NOT protect: Temporary illnesses like flu (not “disability”)

State Sick Leave Laws:

  • Some states: Mandate paid sick leave (California, New York, etc.)
  • Most states: NO paid sick leave requirement (at-will employment = employer can fire for any non-discriminatory reason)

Union Contracts:

  • AFA-CWA contracts: Provide MORE protection than federal/state law (progressive discipline = warnings before termination)
  • BUT contracts allow: Doctor note requirements, disciplinary action for unexcused absences

Practical Reality:

  • Airlines CAN fire: Employees who repeatedly call in sick without documentation
  • Airlines RARELY fire: Immediately (bad optics, union grievances, wrongful termination lawsuits)
  • Airlines USE: Progressive discipline (verbal warning → written warning → suspension → termination)
  • Sick call pattern: 1-2 sick calls/year = no problem, 10-15 sick calls/year (especially weekends/holidays) = termination risk

What Happens Next: Three Scenarios

SCENARIO 1: Airlines WIN (Sick Calls Normalize)

If Frontier/United/Spirit doctor note policies achieve intended effect:

  • Sick call rates drop to normal levels (8-10% vs 20-25%)
  • Operations stabilize (fewer cancellations, on-time performance improves)
  • Employees comply (provide doctor notes when genuinely sick, stop fake sick calls)
  • Policy becomes permanent (airlines keep doctor note requirement year-round)

Likelihood: Moderate (40%)

Evidence: United’s July 2024 policy temporarily reduced sick calls before being suspended = suggests deterrent effect works short-term.


SCENARIO 2: Union WINS (Policies Overturned/Modified)

If employee backlash forces airlines to retreat:

  • AFA-CWA negotiates contract changes restricting doctor note requirements
  • Public relations pressure (media coverage of sick employees forced to work = bad optics for airlines)
  • Legal challenges (employees sue claiming ADA violations if fired while genuinely sick)
  • Airlines soften policies (doctor notes only for extreme cases, not routine sick calls)

Likelihood: Low (20%)

Evidence: United won arbitration = legal precedent favors airlines, unions lack leverage.


SCENARIO 3: Status Quo PERSISTS (Chaos Continues)

If neither side wins decisively:

  • Flu season peaks (January-February 2026) then subsides (March+)
  • Sick call rates normalize naturally (not because of policies, just because flu season ends)
  • Airlines claim victory (“our policies worked!”) even though seasonal flu decline was real cause
  • Employees resent policies but comply under duress (provide doctor notes, fly sick to avoid hassle)
  • Problem recurs next flu season (winter 2026-2027) with same battle repeating

Likelihood: High (40%)

Evidence: Flu is seasonal = problem will naturally improve in spring, masking whether policies actually work.


Bottom Line: Flu Season + Airline Crackdown = Labor Crisis

US airlines force sick flight attendants obtain doctor notes January 2026 creating labor crisis as Frontier’s “drastic action” December 30 email mandates medical documentation ALL sick calls “without exception” (failure = disciplinary action), United’s July 2024 weekend sick note policy wins arbitration ruling establishing legal precedent airlines CAN demand certificates when “evidence of abuse” exists (22% weekend sick call rate = sufficient evidence per independent arbitrator), JetBlue activates “Level 3 Alert” as 20% of crew calls out sick New Year’s (vs much lower previous years = “unsustainable” rate per management), Spirit’s 250% sick call SPIKE vs previous years drives 60+ daily cancellations stranding thousands passengers as bankrupt ultra-low-cost carrier hemorrhages reserves + furloughs 365 pilots + downgrades 170 captains + closes 5 airports (Milwaukee, Phoenix, Rochester, St. Louis, Bucaramanga) = operational death spiral where sick calls → cancellations → customer anger → employee stress → more illness (genuine + alleged) → more cancellations = vicious cycle.

CDC estimates 7.5 million flu cases US winter 2025-2026 validating genuine illness surge BUT airlines argue timing suspicious (sick calls SPIKE weekends, holidays, peak travel periods = pattern suggests abuse not coincidence), medical consensus: flight attendants ARE more vulnerable (enclosed cabins, passenger contact, irregular sleep, stress = weakened immunity) BUT 250% spike exceeds what flu alone explains = likely combination real illness + some employees exploiting flu season cover, economic burden falls on workers: doctor visit costs $50-150 out-of-pocket (1.5 days’ pay for starting flight attendant earning $68/day) + 2-5 hours time burden when sick employee should be resting = policy discourages BOTH fake sick calls (intended effect) AND legitimate sick calls (unintended effect people fly sick to avoid hassle).

Legal precedent United’s June 2025 arbitration victory establishes airlines CAN demand doctor notes when statistical evidence suggests abuse, AFA-CWA union criticizes “tone” of airline memos (calling them “threatening,” “blunt,” “accusatory”) BUT acknowledges policies LEGAL under existing contracts = union hands tied unless contracts renegotiated (difficult given airlines hold leverage post-bankruptcy, industry consolidation), Frontier contract permits mandatory notes “whenever airline thinks required” + 48 hours advance notice = broad authority favoring management, United contract (post-arbitration) permits notes when “evidence of abuse” exists (22% weekend rate = sufficient) + 24 hours notice minimum = airlines nationwide cite ruling when implementing similar policies.

Passenger impact: crew shortages = #1 cause US flight cancellations January 2026 (not weather, not mechanical, not air traffic control), example cascade: 2 flight attendants call in sick morning of departure → airline attempts find reserves → reserve pool depleted → FAA rules prohibit operating flight with insufficient crew → flight cancelled → domino effect as that crew was scheduled operate subsequent flights → multiple cancellations from single initial sick call, airlines blame “operational issues” (vague communication) vs admitting crew shortages, passengers entitled compensation (meals, hotels, rebooking) when cancellation due to crew (NOT weather) but many don’t know rights, frustration mounts as cancellations appear “avoidable” (hire more crew!) vs airline perspective “unforeseeable” (can’t predict sick calls).

Three scenarios ahead: (1) Airlines WIN if sick call rates normalize to 8-10% (vs current 20-25%), operations stabilize, employees comply providing doctor notes genuinely sick + stopping fake calls, policy becomes permanent (moderate likelihood 40% given United’s July 2024 temporary success before suspension), (2) Union WINS if employee backlash forces retreat, AFA-CWA negotiates contract restrictions, public relations pressure (media coverage sick employees forced work = bad optics), legal challenges (wrongful termination lawsuits), airlines soften policies (low likelihood 20% given United arbitration precedent favors airlines + unions lack leverage), (3) Status Quo PERSISTS if neither side wins, flu season naturally subsides March 2026, sick calls normalize due to seasonal decline (not policies), airlines claim victory masking real cause, employees resent but comply, problem recurs winter 2026-2027 repeating battle (high likelihood 40% given flu seasonality).

For travelers, immediate advice: expect continued cancellations/delays through February 2026 (flu season peak), avoid booking Spirit Airlines entirely (operational collapse + bankruptcy = highest risk), build extra connection time (3+ hours minimum), purchase travel insurance covering crew-related cancellations (most policies exclude “foreseeable” events but crew shortages currently NOT deemed foreseeable by insurers = covered), check flight status obsessively (12-24 hours before departure + morning of travel), know passenger rights (cancelled flight due to crew = airline owes compensation meals + hotels + rebooking, but must ASK for it, airlines won’t volunteer), consider flying United/Delta/American vs budget carriers (legacy carriers have deeper reserve pools, less vulnerable to sick call spikes, but NOT immune).

Historical context: airline-employee sick call conflicts cyclical (repeat every few years when operational/financial stress peaks), previous examples: 1999 American Airlines pilot sickout (Valentine’s Day), 2019 Southwest pilot/flight attendant sick calls (Boeing 737 MAX grounding stress), 2023 post-COVID staffing shortages, current 2026 crisis WORST in recent memory due to perfect storm: genuine flu surge (7.5M cases) + alleged abuse (suspicious timing patterns) + airline financial stress (Spirit bankruptcy, Frontier cost-cutting) + depleted reserves (cost savings eliminated buffers) + low employee morale (furloughs, pay stagnation, overwork) = system breaking under cumulative pressure, solution requires: (1) airlines restore reserve pools (hire more backup crew), (2) employees genuine illness stay home + doctor note compliance, (3) alleged abusers stop fake sick calls (or face termination), (4) flu season ends (natural seasonal decline March-April), (5) labor contract negotiations address root causes (staffing minimums, work rules, pay) vs symptom treatment (doctor notes = Band-Aid not cure).


Additional Resources

UNION RESOURCES:

CDC FLU INFORMATION:

PASSENGER RIGHTS:

FLIGHT STATUS:


Related Travel Tourister Coverage:

Published: January 7, 2026 at 3:00 PM ET
Last Updated: January 7, 2026 at 3:00 PM ET
Reading Time: 35 minutes

Posted By : Vinay

As a lead contributor for Travel Tourister, Vinay is dedicated to serving our Tier 1 audience (US, UK, Canada, Australia). His mission is to deliver precise, fact-checked news and actionable, data-driven articles that empower readers to make informed decisions, minimize travel risks, and maximize their adventure without compromising safety or budget.

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